2024 Field

Any president that's oversaw that many deaths doesn't deserve to be president anymore -

Some politician in 2020 race


What matters is perception. You cant deny Republicans would have politicized the **** out of the virus if it happened under a Dem President. If Hillary won in 2016 and oversaw the same thing she would have lost in a 48 state landslide in 2020. The facts of life. None of you would be here defending her. Job #1 of the President is to keep the people safe and Trump failed at that, whether anyone could have in that situation is really irrelevant in the world of politics.
 
What matters is perception. You cant deny Republicans would have politicized the **** out of the virus if it happened under a Dem President. If Hillary won in 2016 and oversaw the same thing she would have lost in a 48 state landslide in 2020. The facts of life. None of you would be here defending her. Job #1 of the President is to keep the people safe and Trump failed at that, whether anyone could have in that situation is really irrelevant in the world of politics.

Actually job number one is to defend the constitution and he did indeed fail at that
 
That would not be accurate. Courts have routinely allowed government to **** all over the constitution in the name of "keeping us safe". Police can make an area a "constitution free zone" to give themselves the right to do what they want. The courts call 100 miles in land constitution free zones to allow border patrol to set up check points which are blatantly unconstitutional. If a war is actually declared by Congress it gives the President all kinds of ability to violate the constitution as well.
 
That would not be accurate. Courts have routinely allowed government to **** all over the constitution in the name of "keeping us safe". Police can make an area a "constitution free zone" to give themselves the right to do what they want. The courts call 100 miles in land constitution free zones to allow border patrol to set up check points which are blatantly unconstitutional. If a war is actually declared by Congress it gives the President all kinds of ability to violate the constitution as well.

when he was sworn in did take an oath to "keep us safe" or to "defend and uphold the constitution"
 
As I recall his first act in office was an executive order making travel more difficult for members of a particular religion. The ****ting on the constitution started on day 1.
 
As I recall his first act in office was an executive order making travel more difficult for members of a particular religion. The ****ting on the constitution started on day 1.

What country has the highest concentration of that particular religion in the world?

Was that country on the proposed travel ban?

Lets skip to where you obviously ignore this and move to where you are outed as a total fraud or as some would like to characterize as a purveyor of reckless Deza.
 
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The question is how long do we the people of the world allow this to happen
 
I cant keep up with your crazy. I thought the great reset was what you wanted. Or is it great awakening. I cant keep track. Maybe its the Great Dump.
 
when he was sworn in did take an oath to "keep us safe" or to "defend and uphold the constitution"


The constitution is at the mercy of being interpreted by biased and flawed human beings. It can literally mean anything a person wants it to mean. We arent far off from people interpreting the second amendment as the right to literal Bear Arms. And by bear I mean the animal.
 
Certain here there are a number of you that drool at the idea of battling " wokeness".
Whatever that means

From where I sit battling "wokeness" is 2024 speak for
own the libs







By Frank Bruni
12/2/22

Mr. Bruni is a contributing Opinion writer who was on the staff of The Times for more than 25 years.


Elon Musk is a geyser of gibberish, so it’s important not to make too much of anything he says. But a recent Twitter thread of his deserved the attention it got, if not for the specific detail on which most journalists focused.

They led with Musk’s statement that he would support a Ron DeSantis candidacy for the presidency in 2024. That obviously disses one Donald Trump, though it should come as no surprise: Magnates like Musk typically cling to the moment’s shiniest toys, and DeSantis, fresh off his re-election, is a curiously gleaming action figure.

But how Musk framed his attraction to the Florida governor was revealing — and troubling. He expressed a desire for a candidate who’s “sensible and centrist,” implying that DeSantis is both.

In what universe? He’s “sensible and centrist” only by the warped yardsticks of Trump, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Kari Lake and the like. But those yardsticks will be used frequently as various Republicans join the 2024 fray. And therein lies real danger.

Trump’s challengers will be defined in relation to him, casting them in a deceptively flattering light. They’ll be deemed steady because he’s not, on the ball because he’s out to lunch, enlightened because they don’t sup with Holocaust deniers. They’ll be realists to his fantasist, institutionalists to his nihilist, preservationists to his arsonist.

None of those descriptions will be true. Some will be persuasive nonetheless.

That dynamic is already doing wonders for DeSantis as he flies high over a very low bar. “Look!” say Republicans eager to take back the White House. “It’s Superman!” Hardly. But his promoters are hoping that the shadow of Trump produces such an optical illusion.

“Plenty of Americans across the partisan divide would have good reason to root for him,” Jim Geraghty, the senior political correspondent for the conservative journal National Review, wrote in a recent essay in The Washington Post that praised DeSantis. Parts of it made DeSantis sound consensus-minded, conciliatory. That’s some trick.

Geraghty added: “Given the bizarre state of American politics during the Trump era, DeSantis would represent a return to normality.” The “given” in that sentence is working overtime, and “normality” fits DeSantis about as well as “sensible” and “centrist” do.

It is not normal to release a campaign ad, as DeSantis did last month, that explicitly identifies you as someone created and commanded by God to pursue the precise political agenda that you’re pursuing. Better words for that include “messianic,” “megalomaniacal” and “delusional.”


It is not sensible to open a new state office devoted to election crimes when there is scant evidence of any need for it. That is called “pandering.” It is also known as a “stunt.”

It is not centrist to have a key aide who tweeted that anyone who opposed the “Don’t Say Gay” education law in Florida was “probably a groomer or at least you don’t denounce the grooming of 4-8 year old children.” Those were the words of Christina Pushaw, who was then DeSantis’s press secretary and “transformed the governor’s state messaging office into a hyperpartisan extension of his political efforts,” as Matt Dixon noted in Politico, adding that she “used the position to regularly pick public fights with reporters on social media, amplify right-wing media outlets and conservative personalities and attack individuals who oppose or challenge DeSantis.”

DeSantis’s response to her derisive and divisive antics? He made her the “rapid response director” for his re-election campaign. Because that’s the normal, sensible, centrist thing to do.

DeSantis used his power as governor to punish Disney for daring to dissent from his political views. He used migrants as political pawns and sent two planes full of them to Martha’s Vineyard. He pushed for an extreme gerrymander in Florida that marginalized minority voters. He’s a darling of the National Rifle Association.

And the signature line from his stump speech is that Florida is “where woke goes to die.” I’m with him on the destructiveness of peak wokeness, but base-camp wokeness has some lessons and virtues, which a sensible centrist might acknowledge and reflect on. Can’t Florida be where woke goes to decompress in the sun and surf and re-emerge in more relaxed form?

DeSantis himself might currently reject the labels that Musk gave him: It’s the right-wing-warrior side that promises to propel him most forcefully through the primaries, should he enter them. But he or any nominee not named Trump would likely segue to the general election by flashing shades of moderation.

In DeSantis’s case, there’d be chatter galore about his 19-point re-election victory as proof of his appeal’s breadth. But another Republican, Senator Marco Rubio, won re-election in Florida by sixteen points, suggesting that forces beyond DeSantis’s dubiously pan-partisan magnetism were in play. And Florida is redder than it used to be.

The extremists and conspiracists so prevalent in today’s Republican Party have distorted the frame for everyone else, permitting the peddling of DeSantis as some paragon of reason. Be savvier than Musk. Don’t buy it.
 
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Thats going to be an interesting situation because Iowa has it mandated by law that they be the first primary and NH has it in their laws that they be the first caucus. I dont believe they will be changing that law anytime soon either.
 
Thats going to be an interesting situation because Iowa has it mandated by law that they be the first primary and NH has it in their laws that they be the first caucus. I dont believe they will be changing that law anytime soon either.

You have it backwards.

Iowa for caucus.
NH for primaries.
 
It's interesting. South Carolina acted as Biden's firewall after he lost NH and Iowa.

I wonder with order flipped we could have a scenario where a moderate candidate wins SC but loses momentum to more left-wing candidate in subsequent states. I understand the reasoning for putting SC first, but the law of unintended consequences has a way of asserting itself.
 
It doesn't have to be SC. It can be Georgia or a battleground state which further reflects the demographics of the party and country.

Georgia would be a good one to lead off with.

I don’t actually disagree with this, and think the idea of a locked primary schedule in the first place is dumb, I just found it pretty funny that Biden’s team came up with the ‘start with SC’ plan when that was the state that was basically the turning point for his campaign in ‘20.
 
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